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Coleridge And The Explosion Of Voice - 1,781 words
... than French and English."[15] During the
Lyrical Ballads months, he composed many
experimental ballad poems: between September 1797
and April 1798 he began The Rime of the Ancient
Mariner, Christabel, "The Three Graves," and "The
Ballad of the Dark Ladie." Soon after, he traveled
to Germany with the Wordsworths; he spent
virtually a year there, reading German philosophy
and aesthetics voraciously, particularly Kant,
Schelling, and the Schlegels. It was during this
visit that he bought Herder's Volkslieder. He
returned to England in July, 1799. And in the
autumn of that year, amid his failing marriage, he
traveled to Durham and met Sara Hutchinson whilst
with the Wordsworths. He fell in ...
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Mary Shelley And Frankenstein - 1,744 words
Mary Shelley And Frankenstein Godwin Shelley was
the only daughter of William Godwin and Mary
Wollenstonecraft, a quite dynamic pair during
their time. Mary Shelley is best known for her
novel Frankenstein: or The Modern Prometheus,
which has transcended the Gothic and horror genres
that now has been adapted to plays, movies, and
sequels. Her life though scattered with tragedies
and disgrace, was one of great passion and poetry,
which I find quite fascinating, but not desirable.
Shelleys other literary works were mildly
successful their time, but are little known today.
Her reputation rests, however, on what she once
called her "Hideous Progeny," Frankenstein. To
understand her writing you m ...
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Thomas Stearns Eliot - 207 words
Thomas Stearns Eliot T.S. Eliot was born in 1888
in St. Louis, MO. He is described as one of the
most distinguished literary figures of the 20th
centurey. Eliot studied at Harvard, the Sorbonne,
and Oxford. In 1914 he established residence in
London. After working as a teacher and a bank
clerk, he began a publishing career; he was
assistant editor of the Egoist (1917-1919) and
edited his own quarterly, the Criterion
(1922-1939). In 1925 he was employed by the
publishing house of Faber and Faber, eventually
becoming one of its directors. His first marriage,
to Vivien Haigh-Wood was troubled and ended with
their separation. His early poetical
works-Prufrock and Other Observations (1917),
Poems ...
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